vietnam weather – Artifex.News https://artifex.news Stay Connected. Stay Informed. Fri, 03 Oct 2025 08:18:00 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=7.0 https://artifex.news/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/cropped-cropped-app-logo-32x32.png vietnam weather – Artifex.News https://artifex.news 32 32 Typhoon Bualoi: Death toll rises to 51 in Vietnam, banks told to support affected firms https://artifex.news/article70120593-ece/ Fri, 03 Oct 2025 08:18:00 +0000 https://artifex.news/article70120593-ece/ Read More “Typhoon Bualoi: Death toll rises to 51 in Vietnam, banks told to support affected firms” »

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This aerial image shows flooding caused by rain following typhoon Bualoi in Lao Cai, Vietnam, on September 30, 2025.
| Photo Credit: AP

The death toll in Vietnam from Typhoon Bualoi and the floods it triggered has risen to 51, according to a Friday (October 3, 2025) government report, as the central bank urged banks to support affected businesses.

Bualoi made landfall on Monday (September 30, 2025) in northern central Vietnam, bringing huge sea swells, strong winds and heavy rains that also left 14 people missing and injured 164 others, according to the report from the government’s disaster management agency.

The agency also raised its estimate of property damage caused by the typhoon and its flooding to 15.9 trillion dong ($603 million), up from $435.8 million in a previous report released on Thursday (October 2, 2025).

The typhoon severely damaged roads, schools and offices, and caused power grid failures that left tens of thousands of families without electricity, the report said.

Also read: Severe flooding and widespread damage reported across Vietnam

More than 230,000 houses were damaged or inundated, and nearly 89,000 hectares of rice and other crops were destroyed, it said.

The report did not mention any major damage to industrial properties.

Vietnam is a regional manufacturing hub, and large factories in or near the typhoon’s path included some owned by Foxconn, Formosa Plastics, Luxshare and Vinfast.

The central bank has told banks to consider restructuring or freezing loans for firms hit by the typhoon, Deputy Governor Pham Thanh Ha said on Friday (October 3, 2025).

($1 = 26,383 dong)



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Typhoon Bualoi death toll rises to 19 in Vietnam as Hanoi streets flooded https://artifex.news/article70111829-ece/ Tue, 30 Sep 2025 06:06:00 +0000 https://artifex.news/article70111829-ece/ Read More “Typhoon Bualoi death toll rises to 19 in Vietnam as Hanoi streets flooded” »

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People watch as workers remove fallen trees and electric polls from a road after Typhoon Bualoi makes landfall in Nghe An province, Vietnam, September 29, 2025.
| Photo Credit: Reuters

Vietnam’s death toll from Typhoon Bualoi rose to 19 with another 21 people still missing, the government said on Tuesday (September 30, 2025), making it the most devastating storm to hit the country this year as heavy rains caused severe flooding in Hanoi and across northern provinces.

Bualoi made landfall on Monday in northern central Vietnam, bringing huge sea swells, strong winds and downpours. Last week, the typhoon had killed at least 10 people in the Philippines.

The government said 88 people had also been injured, more than 100,000 houses were damaged, mostly in Nghe An and Ha Tinh provinces, and more than 10,000 hectares of rice and crops had been inundated.

Rainfall in several parts of Vietnam had exceeded 300 millimetres over the past 24 hours, the national weather agency said as it warned of a risk of landslides and flash flooding.

Hanoi flooded

In the capital Hanoi, streets were heavily flooded as persistent downpours were accompanied by thunder and lightning, paralysing traffic in many downtown areas.

“It doesn’t rain, it pours,” said 49-year-old Hanoi resident Hoang Quoc Uy.

“Water is flowing into my living room… I’ve never seen anything like this before.”

As of Tuesday, several villages in northern central Vietnam remained flooded with no traffic access or power, state media reported.

Floodwaters rose to close to the roof level of houses in several villages in Nghe An province, according to footage on state broadcaster VTV.

“This is my house, the roof above had been blown away by the typhoon wind and it is now half a metre deep in flood water,” 56-year-old Nghe An resident Ngo Thi Loan told Reuters.

“All of my belongings have been damaged, all gone,” Loan said.

With a long coastline facing the South China Sea, Vietnam is prone to typhoons that often also bring heavy rains that cause severe flooding.



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Thousands Of Fish Die In Vietnam Amid Brutal Heatwave https://artifex.news/vietnam-fish-deaths-thousands-of-fish-die-in-vietnam-amid-brutal-heatwave-5565513/ Wed, 01 May 2024 12:38:14 +0000 https://artifex.news/vietnam-fish-deaths-thousands-of-fish-die-in-vietnam-amid-brutal-heatwave-5565513/ Read More “Thousands Of Fish Die In Vietnam Amid Brutal Heatwave” »

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Authorities are investigating the incident while working to quickly remove the dead fish.

Dong Nai:

Hundreds of thousands of fish have died in a reservoir in southern Vietnam’s Dong Nai province, with locals and media reports suggesting a brutal heatwave and the lake’s management are to blame.

Like much of Southeast Asia — where schools have recently been forced to close early and electricity usage has surged — southern and central Vietnam have been scorched by devastating heat.

“All the fish in the Song May reservoir died for lack of water,” a local resident in Trang Bom district, who identified himself only as Nghia, told AFP.

“Our life has been turned upside down over the past 10 days because of the smell.”

Pictures show residents wading and boating through the 300-hectare Song May reservoir, with the water barely visible under a blanket of dead marine life.

According to media reports, the area has seen no rain for weeks, and the water in the reservoir is too low for the creatures to survive.

Reservoir management had previously discharged water to try to save crops downstream, Nghia said.

“They then tried to renovate the reservoir, bringing in a pump to take the mud out so that the fish would have more space and water,” he said.

However, the efforts did not work, and shortly afterwards many of the fish died, with local media reports suggesting as many as two hundred tonnes’ worth may have perished.

Tuoi Tre newspaper reported that the firm in charge of managing the lake had begun dredging in early 2024, initially planning to release extra water into the reservoir for the fish.

“But owing to an unrelenting heatwave, the investor released the water into the downstream area, leading to the water level going down. As a result, fish died en masse,” the newspaper reported.

The reservoir is the water source for crops in the Trang Bom and Vinh Cuu districts of Dong Nai province.

Authorities are investigating the incident while working to quickly remove the dead fish.

“We hope authorities will do their best to improve the situation,” Nghia said.

Southeast Asia bakes

According to weather forecasters, temperatures in Dong Nai province, 100 kilometres west of Ho Chi Minh City, reached around 40 degrees Celsius (104 degrees Fahrenheit) in April, breaking the record high temperature recorded in 1998.

The soaring temperatures are also impacting neighbouring Cambodia, where the high could reach 43 on the mercury.

On Wednesday Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Manet ordered schools to consider closing to protect teachers and students from the heat and put officials on stand-by in case of water shortages.

It follows the education minister on Tuesday ordering establishments to shorten morning classes and delay afternoon ones in an attempt to avoid the worst of the midday heat.

Hang Chuon Naron said the measures were “to prevent risks and to avoid illnesses that would harm the health” of students and teachers.

Meanwhile, in Thailand, electricity usage surged to new records on Tuesday as temperatures in the northeastern province of Udon Thani broke 44C.

(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)

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